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Tag: EzineArticles

  • EzineArticles CEO: Panda the Greatest Wake-Up Call Ever to Happen to Us

    EzineArticles CEO: Panda the Greatest Wake-Up Call Ever to Happen to Us

    In a recent article, we looked at some efforts by EzineArticles to get its users improving the quality of links in articles, which could in turn help the site perform better in Google. This wasn’t the way the topic was approached by EzineArticles itself, but as a site that was hit hard by the Panda update, it’s not hard to put the pieces together.

    CEO Chris Knight chimed in on the subject in the comments of the article. “We’re convinced that landing page quality scoring (something we’ve been doing for years) is as important to the trust relationship being built with our users as the content by itself,” Knight tells WebProNews.

    “Last month, we made a huge crack down by rejecting all content where the link in the resource box wasn’t relevant enough to the article topic (we call it a link-relevancy-rejection) and we’re continuing to sweep our history to isolate articles that were written about one topic and then link to a completely unrelated topic (this causes a trust violation with our users and therefore must be a practice that ends),” he adds “It was our fault for accepting this type of content because we had previously only focused on the quality merits of the article alone with only mechanical formatting QC on the links themselves. This is a new era though and what was ok last year, isn’t ok any more this year.”

    Chris Knight of EzineArticles Talks Impact of Google Algorithm  Update“It makes sense that the bar should be raised so that when our users leave EzineArticles.com to surf your website, that you continue to deliver them a quality experience,” Knight says. “If our user hates your website because it’s an MFA or you’ve got multiple exit-pops or you’re an affiliate marketer with no intention to build an on-going relationship with your client base…this reflects poorly on us.”

    Knight also put a positive spin on the whole loss of search traffic thing – a survivor’s stance, if you will.

    “You’ve called us a ‘Panda victim’ but I see Panda as the greatest wakeup call that has ever happened to us,” he says. “No doubt we’d prefer to have been giving better guidance from Google, but over-time, the best sites with the best quality end-to-end user experience will rise up and I’m confident we’ll rebuild market trust.”

    After the Panda update first rolled out, EzineArticles announced it was reducing the number of article submissions accepted by over 10%, particularly articles that “are not unique enough”. The company also said it would no longer accept article submissions through a WordPress Plugin, that it would reduce the number of ads per page., that it would raise the minimum article word count to 400, that it would “raising the bar” on keyword density limits, that it would remove articles considered “thin and spammy”, and that it would put greater focus on rejection of advertorial articles.

    That was apparently just the beginning.

    “We’re a radically different company today because of the 125+ quality changes we’ve made in the past 2 months that normally would have been made over a longer period of time…and there’s several hundred more quality control mods on deck for both us and to help our members meet the new standards,” Knight tells us.

    Knight raised a fair point about monitor size and perception of ads, after we pointed out that the site was running articles with what seem like an excessive amount of ads, especially compared to the article’s content. We looked at this example, with not a great deal of article length, but with four Google ads at the very top, three above the content body, six other ads below it, two more Google ads below those ads, some “related” links, five more ads below those, then ten Google ads to the right.

    I had written that the ads on the right stretched a vertical length twice the amount of the body itself. “We did remove 40% of the ads above the article body (there used to be 5 ads above the body and now there are 3) but I get your point,” he said. “We’re also split-testing ad layout changes constantly via different segments.”

    “As for the example article you used, you must have a monitor and resolution that only a minority of our users have,” he added. “Majority of our users see an article body that is bigger than the ads because their resolution and monitor size isn’t as big as yours. In addition, lower word count articles have less ads. Our solution to your perception that our ad density is too high or wraps the length of the body (only on 24-30″ wide monitors running double the resolution that the majority of folks have or use) is to move to a fixed width layout.”

    He linked to a new layout template, and said, “And very soon, the article view template will have the new fixed width template plus several new major modifications to assist us with delivering a higher numerically-qualified positive user experience.”

    Either way, it seems like there are still quite a few ads on most of the articles I’ve looked at. In a list of “questions that one could use to assess the ‘quality’ of a page or an article” recently released by Google, there is one that says, “Does this article have an excessive amount of ads that distract from or interfere with the main content?”

    As Knight said, EzineArticles has reduced the number of ads, and I believe articles used to have more ads within the article bodies, which they no longer do. Certainly a step in the right direction.


  • Google Panda Victim EzineArticles Calls on Users to Improve Link Quality

    Google Panda Victim EzineArticles Calls on Users to Improve Link Quality

    Since Google’s Panda update, we’ve been looking at a lot of the sites negatively impacted, as examples to learn from. Determining what these sites have been doing wrong can help us understand how other sites may be viewed in Google’s eyes.

    We’ve also been looking at what some of these sites have been doing to try and recover some of their lost search traffic. Some sites have indeed seen an uptick in search referrals, after being victimized by the update.

    EzineArticles has been one of the more widely-publicized victims of the update, and also one of the most vocal in terms of reaching out to its users in efforts to improve content. On the company blog, there have been numerous tips and guidelines discussed in recent months. This continues with a new post from a managing editor, who discusses landing page quality for article contributors.

    The editor lists a few “article rejection-worthy scenarios,” including: linking to a site unrelated to the article content, duplicating article content on landing pages, having more than one exit pop-up, having limited or poor user-navigation or forcing users to affiliate pages without transparent intent, and having a poor or unbalanced ad-to-content ratio.

    In terms of navigation, the editor specifically mentions slow-loading landing pages.

    While much of the guidance EzineArticles has been giving to users of late has been focused on the content that actually appears on EzineArticles itself, it is interesting to see them now turning focus to the content that EzineArticles is linking to.

    In other words, the goal is not only to improve the site’s content, but to improve the content that is being associated with it in the eyes of the search engines.

    Linking out to poor quality content is not good SEO. This isn’t new to Panda. It’s a pretty old, well-known element of the game. EzineArticles’ reminder of this to its users somewhat reflects a point we discussed in another recent article. Panda victims will do well not only to dwell on the Panda update specifically, but to get back to SEO basics.

    Remember, Google has over 200 signals, and just because your site may have gotten hit by the Panda update, doesn’t mean that there aren’t other SEO practices you couldn’t be doing better – practices that may have benefited you all along, pre and post Panda.

    The point about site speed is a valid one too. We know Google uses site speed as a ranking factor. We don’t know the weight of it (though DaniWeb has some interesting stats related to this). If Google views the landing page as a less quality page because of the page load time, it can’t help the article linking to that page either.

    So, if EzineArticles is able to get its users to take quality more seriously on their own sites, it could go a long way in helping Google’s perception of EzineArticles itself. Whether or not users will follow the advice and this will happen, remains to be seen.

    It’s worth noting that EzineArticles is still running some pretty ad-heavy content. At the time of this writing, this is the top article on the site. There are three Google ads above the content body, six ads directly below it, two Google ads below those ads, a bunch of “related” links below those, and five more ads below those. To the right of the article body there are ten Google ads, stretching a vertical length of about twice the amount of the body itself. Oh, and there are 4 more Google ads at the very top of the page, above the title. This seems to be the basic article template the site is running with.

  • EzineArticles Hit By Google Panda Update Again

    EzineArticles Hit By Google Panda Update Again

    EzineArticles was one of the sites impacted the hardest by Google’s Panda update in the U.S. back in February. As we said back then, once Google expanded the update into other countries, the sites that saw their traffic drop off would be in for an even bigger shock.

    Data out now from both SearchMetrics and Sistrix seems to confirm that EzineArticles was indeed hit yet again. SearchMetrics, looking at UK search data has EzineArticles with a drop in search visibility of as much as 93.69%. Sistrix, looking at Europe, has the site as its number 2 loser with a change of -78%.

    Shortly after the initial U.S. Panda update rolled out, EzineArticles CEO Chris Knight discussed it on the company blog, and started laying down some guidelines for moving forward – aimed at increasing quality of content.

    Changes included: reducing the number of article submissions accepted by over 10% – articles that “are not unique enough”, no longer accepting article submissions through a WordPress Plugin, a reduction in the number of ads per page, raising the minimum article word count to 400, “raising the bar” on keyword density limits, removing articles considered “thin and spammy”, putting greater focus on rejection of advertorial articles, and submitted articles required to be exclusive to the submitter.

    In early March, Knight told us, “Beyond what we shared in the blog/twitter, we’re going to return to not sharing specifics on our traffic or ranking.”

    Knight did post an update on the blog in late March, saying they lost between ten and thirty-five percent of traffic. “This update went after ‘thin content’,” he said. “This is low-quality derivative content. In fact, we agree with Google on this update, and we’ve made sweeping changes to our quality review system – our editorial guidelines our internal processes.”

    EzineArticles has been quiet about the new update so far. No new blog posts or tweets referencing it. They are still pushing the quality message, however. Here are the latest tweets from the EzineArticles Team:

    Search for the crossroads between your interests & what your readers want. Your writing will never get “stuck” when these things intersect. 1 day ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto

    An article title is a promise/commitment to your readers. How are you delivering on those promises? http://is.gd/jf4C6R 19 hours ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto

    It’s worth noting, that in addition to just rolling out the same update from the U.S. to other countries, Google has made some adjustments in the U.S. as well. These new adjustments affect about 2% of queries, according to Google. They include the use of Google’s recently launched domain-blocking feature (in “high-confidence” situations).

    So, in other words, if enough people have blocked EzineArticles from their search results, it is possible that Google is taking that into account. We’ve speculated that this has happened to Demand Media’s eHow property, which survived the initial Panda update, but is on the new lists from SearchMetrics and Sistrix.

    Clear winners in this round of the update (based on data from SearchMetrics) are several Google properties and their competitors, as well as video sites, news sites and blogs, and even a few porn sites.

  • EzineArticles Tells Authors How to Get Accepted Post Panda

    If you’ve been keeping up with the fallout from Google’s Panda algorithm update, you’ll know that EzineArticles has been reported to have been one of the hardest hit sites. Last week, CEO Christohper Knight gave an update about the site’s traffic.

    He said, they lost between ten and thirty-five percent of their traffic, but Google has yet to roll out the update internationally, and that could mean more bad news for the sites that have already seen their traffic slides since the U.S. update.

    EzineArticles CEO Chris Knight Gives Update on Traffic After Google Panda Algorithm Update

    Shortly after the update, EzineArticles quickly set out some new quality guidelines and site tweaks aimed at getting its content back in Google’s good graces. Now they’re giving users tips to help them “create high quality articles that will have a much better chance of being approved”.

    EzineArticles’ Director of Online Education runs them down on the company blog. They include:

    – Matching author names between the byline and the author in the resource box.

    – Limiting links to a maximum of 4 (2 self-serving and 2 non-self-serving). Keeping the self-serving ones in the resource box is recommended.

    – Content delivering on the article title

    – Limiting referenced material, with the majority being original content. I wonder how many will simply choose to forego credit where it’s due.

    – Properly formatting articles with now grammatical errors and “plenty of white space”

    – Limiting resource box to 15% of the total number of words in the article.

    – Limiting use of any one keyword to no more than 2% of the total amount of words in the article.

    EzineArticles is also encouraging authors to pay close attention to their writing analytics, which include article stats like total views, URL clicks, clickthrough rates, EzinePublisher (which indicates the number of times an article has been picked up by an ezine publisher), number of times article has been emailed, comments, and votes/ratings.

    It will be interesting to watch EzineArticles’ traffic patterns in light of the continued focus on quality improvement.

  • EzineArticles Traffic Update Post Panda

    Early on in the aftermath of Google’s Panda algorithm update (sometimes referred to as the “Farmer” update), EzineArticles was reported to be one of the hardest hit sites. The following week, CEO Chris Knight told WebProNews, “We’ve had quite a few niche categories go up in traffic but the overall is still lower than before last Thursday.”

    Still, Knight immediately began making big changes to the operations of the site, in an effort to quickly recovered the lost traffic. We looked at some of that here.

    Now, Knight has a blog post/video up, responding to a question from a user, who was under the impression that the site has lost 90% of its traffic. “It’s not true,” Knight said. “Recently, Google had an update that hit us, and we lost between ten and thirty-five percent of our traffic.”

    “In our eleven-year history of EzineArticles.com, we’ve never been hit by an update until now,” Knight said, referencing the fact that Google’ makes updates about every day.

    EzineArticles CEO Chris Knight Gives Update on Traffic After Google Panda Algorithm Update

    “This update went after ‘thin content’,” he added. “This is low-quality derivative content. In fact, we agree with Google on this update, and we’ve made sweeping changes to our quality review system – our editorial guidelines our internal processes.”

    “Every year since we began – every month actually – we’ve risen the quality bar. However, in the last few weeks, we’ve risen a year’s worth of quality bar raising in about a two-week period of time. In an effort to weed out thin, derivative, low-quality content, and highlight and identify what is the absolute best content. In fact, I’ve never been more proud of the content I see in EzineArticles.com today, and I’m really happy about…I’m not happy about losing the traffic, but I’m really excited about the quality of the content I see now.”

    “In conclusion…we did not lose 90% of our traffic,” Knight said. “In fact, some markets within our 700-niche markets that we serve, went up. Others went down, but overall, we lost between ten and thirty-five percent of our traffic, but we still are serving over one million visitors a day.”

    Knight would not respond to a recent request for comment on EzineArticles’ traffic.

    One important fact for this site (and any other site affected by the Panda update) to consider is that Google has only launched the update in the US so far. There are some rumblings in the forums that Google may have launched Panda in the UK, but comments from UK webmasters seem to dispell the notion. We’ve heard nothing about it from Google so far.

    When Google first launched the update, Google’s Amit Singhal and Matt Cutts said, in these exact words, “To start with, we’re launching this change in the U.S. only; we plan to roll it out elsewhere over time. We’ll keep you posted as we roll this and other changes out, and as always please keep giving us feedback about the quality of our results because it really helps us to improve Google Search.”

    Unless your site gets all of its traffic from the U.S., you may be in for further damage from Panda, if you’ve already been affected by it. This will be true each time it rolls out in another country. That is, if you haven’t made adjustments to your content that keep it up to Google’s quality standards.

    Of course, that’s easier said than done, because Google doesn’t exactly give you a manual. There are some things we know, and some other things that are possible, however, that may help.

    EzineArticles.comDon’t settle for the results you’re getting today, even if they are great. Always look to create greater results tomorrow & be phenomenal!

    I’ve rec’d some pretty nasty hate mail & I fear it’s going to get much worse as our article rejection rate climbs even more steeply today. 27 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    User-generated content that is extensively human quality controlled & thoughtfully curated is not a content farm. 23 days ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Loved this forum comment someone made: “There is such a thing as too much “quality control” & EzineArticles has gone far beyond that point!” 19 days ago via web · powered by @socialditto

  • EzineArticles: Some Content Ranking Higher

    EzineArticles: Some Content Ranking Higher

    Since being hit hard by Google’s recent algorithm update, EzineArticles is hard at work, trying to get its rankings and traffic back up. CEO Chris Knight tells WebProNews, "Beyond what we shared in the blog/twitter, we’re going to return to not sharing specifics on our traffic or ranking."

    He adds, however, "We’ve had quite a few niche categories go up in traffic but the overall is still lower than before last Thursday. I’ve heard today (Wired.com) that Google is working on getting it more ‘right’ so that great content doesn’t get caught in this filter and I’m hopeful that we’ll see better rankings for most of our members who deserve it."

    You can read more about changes the company was looking at here. Since he mentioned Twitter, here’s some recent messages they’ve put out:

    In today’s Blog, we dig deeper into quality and begin by focusing on 3 key areas: http://is.gd/WoRCYlless than a minute ago via HootSuite

    NEW: On Link Relevancy and Resource Box Content. Your link and resource box content must be consistent and relevant to your article topic.less than a minute ago via HootSuite

    NEW/IMPROVED: Location stuffed articles that fail to deliver a positive user experience will be rejected.less than a minute ago via HootSuite

    If English isn’t your first language, we strongly recommend that you have an native-English editor check your work before you submit.less than a minute ago via web

    Hearing positive comments by many EzineArticles members who are happy they won’t have to compete w/ article vomit/spammy spun content.less than a minute ago via web

    No layoffs for @EzineArticles team members. Quality exceptional article content will always rise to the top over-time.less than a minute ago via web

    We shut down all of our public @EzineAPI services last night. Our positive intentions for its use never materialized. Perhaps another day.less than a minute ago via web

    Article spammers typically don’t include their author name at the start of their resource box. Because they are not proud of their articles!less than a minute ago via web

    If you want credibility, don’t do what article spammers do. Duh. 🙂 Include your author name at the start of your resource box.less than a minute ago via web

    On Facebook, Knight added:

    Christopher KnightJust announced via Twitter that we won’t be laying off any of our 75 behind-the-scenes team members due to last Thursday’s Google algo update. High quality exception articles will always rise to the top; so shall EzineArticles.com again in the near future.

    He added in the comments of that post, "I’m trying to stay focused on what I’m grateful for. We still served over a million people yesterday. How awesome is that!? Yet, I’m still on high-alert to ensure we do everything we can to draw a very sharp line as to what denotes quality content vs. what should never be published. The bar has been raised, but that’s nothing new."

    The talk about not laying people off is presumably in reference to the Mahalo situation we covered here. Mahalo CEO Jason Calacanis told us "All we can do is put our heads down and continue to make better and better content. If we do our job I’m certain the algorithm will treat us fairly in the long-term." 

    "The 90+ members of our team are rallying around this challenge, and you will continue to see amazing content from experts with real credentials at Mahalo.com," he added. 

    Clearly, despite some of the questionable casualties of Google’s update it seems the message was sent loud and clear. You better be putting out quality content if you’re expecting to get traffic from Google. 

    The eHow debate will surely continue to rage on, as that site still gets plenty of Google love, but Demand Media does nothing but stress the importance it is putting on quality as well. 

    In time, we’ll see how Google’s search quality holds up, and how the traffic levels of some of these sites do – and how dependent on Google they remain. 

  • Google Algorithm Update Casualties Speak

    Google Algorithm Update Casualties Speak

    Last week, Google launched a major update to its algorithm, which was positioned as one that would go after content farms. While some sites that are often attached to that label were in fact hurt by the update, some other sites that aren’t generally considered content farms became casualties as well. 

    Was your site impacted by Google’s algorithm update? For better or worse? Let us know

    Now, it’s important to note that Google did not come out and use the phrase “content farm” when it announced the update, but the company used language similar to what it has used in the past when talking about content farms. In a nutshell, the algorithm was supposed to be aimed at reducing rankings for lower quality content. Those who found their rankings impacted negatively are not thrilled with having their content deemed as such, and some of the sites that were apparently devalued, do raise some eyebrows. 

    Take, for example, Cult of Mac. This is a tech blog that covers Apple news. It is often linked to by other sources, and frequently appears on Techmeme as a source. A lot of Apple enthusiasts visit the site on a regular basis for updates. Leander Kahney, the site’s editor and publisher, wrote a scathing post about Google’s update, proclaiming, “We’ve become a civilian casualty in the war against content farms…Why us? We have no idea. The changes Google has made to its system are secret. What makes it worse is that Google’s tinkering seems to have actually improved Demand Media’s page rank, while killing ours…We’re a blog, so we aggregate news stories like everyone else. But our posts are 100% original and we do a ton of original reporting…”

    “We can go toe-to-toe with any other tech news site out there,” he wrote. “We break a ton of stuff. Go take a look at MacRumors, which is very good at giving credit, and see how often we’re cited as the source of stories…Yes, we report other’s stories, just like Engadget, MacRumors, AppleInsider, Wired, Daring Fireball and everyone else. That’s the news business on the Web. It’s a flow, a conversation…The question is whether we add value — figure out what it means, if a rumor is credible, what the historical context is. We do that and we do it well. Plus we give clear credit where credit is due (unlike the original content stealers like Engadget and Mashable. Try to figure out what stories they ripped off from us).”  Note: those accusations appear to have been removed from the post. 

    Even PRNewswire, the press release distribution service was devalued by Google’s update. Kahney also defended that site, after a commenter on his post mentioned it. He said, “…and for your information, PR newswire isn’t a content farm either. It published press releases for thousands of companies. Crappy spam websites pull releases from its RSS feeds and republish it as pretend content — which may be why it was down ranked by Google.”

    Technorati got hit too. This site was once considered a darling among bloggers, and now apparently it’s been reduced to a low quality site clogging up the search results, based on Google’s doings. CEO Richard Jalichandra doesn’t appear to have acknowledged this:

    So Google changed its algo’s last week to redirect traffic away from content farms…….where did all the diverted traffic go?!less than a minute ago via Twitter for iPhone

    Other sites more often associated with the content farm label, though they’ll pretty much all do everything they can to distance themselves from it, were also hit by the update – sites like Associated Content (run by Yahoo), Suite101, HubPages, Mahalo, EzineArticles, and others. Reports have indicated that Demand Media’s eHow – the site most often associated with the label, was actually helped by the update.

    The notion that eHow was helped has been questioned. Erik Sherman at CBS looks at Compete data, and writes, “What seems to be a jump may be a normal increase, which raises the question of whether it would have been larger without the algorithm changes.” 

    However, if you do some searching in Google, you’ll probably notice that there is still a great deal of eHow content ranking well – and still under questionable circumstances (see “level 4 brain cancer” example discussed previously). 

    Still, Demand Media as a whole was not immune from the update. At least three of their sites were negatively impacted: Trails.com, Livestrong.com, and AnswerBag.com. After the update was announced,  Larry Fitzgibbon, Demand Media’s EVP of Media and Operations, said: “As might be expected, a content library as diverse as ours saw some content go up and some go down in Google search results. This is consistent with what Google discussed on their blog post. It’s impossible to speculate how these or any changes made by Google impact any online business in the long term – but at this point in time, we haven’t seen a material net impact on our Content & Media business.”

    Pia Chatterjee of HubPages tells us, “On our end we think that its really too soon to tell, as after any large update, all the traffic undergoes pretty serious upheaval. All these numbers will be very different in about 7/10 days. What is worrying is that the update did not seem to do what it was supposed to, which was penalize poor content. The fact that e-how has remained untouched is proof of that!”

    “Our CEO, Paul Edmondson says:  We are confident that over time the proven quality of our writers’ content will be attractive to users. We have faith in Google’s ability to tune results post major updates and are optimistic that the cream will rise back to the top in the coming weeks, which has been our experience with past updates.”

    EzineArticles CEO Chris Knight wrote a blog post about how his site was affected, and what he is doing to try and get back up in the rankings.  "While we adamantly disagree with anyone who places the ‘Content Farm’ label on EzineArticles.com, we were not immune to this algorithm change," he wrote. "Traffic was down 11.5% on Thursday and over 35% on Friday. In our life-to-date, this is the single most significant reduction in market trust we’ve experienced from Google." 

    To try and get back into Google’s good graces, EzineArticles is doing things like reducing the number of article submissions accepted by over 10% – rejecting articles that "are not unique enough". It will no longer accept article submissions through a WordPress Plugin. They’re reducing the number of ads per page. They’re raising the minimum article word count to 400. They’re "raising the bar" on keyword density limits. They’re removing articles considered "thin and spammy", and will put greater focus on rejection of advertorial articles. Submitted articles are required to be exclusive to the submitter (but won’t be required to be unique to EzineArticles).  

    Knight also considered adding a Nofollow attribute to links in the article, as “icing in the cake to further prove to Matt Cutts and Google” that they’re not trying to “game Google” or let their authors do so. Interestingly enough, Knight decided to hold off on adding Nofollow after complaints from authors. 

    The first author to complain, in fact, even said, “Not sure what Pollyanna planet you’re from but let me assure you, EzineArticles does not exist ‘to provide information that is beneficial to the readers.’ EzineArticles is a business, not a government organization or charity. EzineArticles was created to make its owner(s) money. There’s nothing wrong with that, but don’t fool yourself into thinking they’re a bunch of do-gooders. By the same token, the majority of us who publish on EzineArticles don’t do so to benefit readers. We too are running businesses, and EzineArticles helps our own websites get traffic and ultimately sales." 

    Yeah, I think Google frowns upon that whole “we’re not writing to benefit readers” thing. 

    Another element of this whole algorithm update is that so far, it is only active in the U.S. Once Google expands it into other countries, the sites that have seen their traffic drop off so far may be in for an even bigger shock. 

    By the way, there are a lot more sites impacted than those discussed in this article.

    In an interview with On the Media, Google’s Matt Cutts was asked: “You have so much market share; you are so much the only game in town at this point that you can enforce these things unilaterally, without hearing or due process, putting the whole online world more or less at your mercy. Is there any process by which the people who are affected by algorithm changes and updates can make a case for themselves?”

    Cutts responded: 

    We have a webmaster forum where you can show up and ask questions, and Google employees keep an eye on that forum. And, in fact, if you’ve been hit with a, what we call a “manual action,” there’s something called a “reconsideration request,” which essentially is an appeal that says, ah, I’m sorry that I was hiding text or doing keyword stuffing and I’ve corrected the problem, could you review this?

    And over time, we’ve, I think, done more communication than any other search engine in terms of sending messages to people whose site has been hacked or who have issues and then trying to be open so that if people want to give us feedback, we listen to that.”

    Cutts later said, “Any change will have some losses, but hopefully a lot more wins than losses.”

    It does seem that Google may be willing to ackwowledge some errors in judgement on the matter, if this exchange between Cutts and Kahney is any indication:

    @lkahney the appropriate people at the Googleplex have heard that report, I’m sure. Feel free to snag me at SXSW if you see me though.less than a minute ago via web

    @mattcutts awesome. let’s hope someone saw it and fixes it. i’m counting on you guys. tx for message. made my dayless than a minute ago via TweetDeck

    I wonder how many more people will be trying to snag Cutts at SXSW. 

    Update: Since this article was written, Cult of Mac has seen its Google rankings return to normal. More on this here.

    Were there more wins than losses with this update? How’s the search quality looking to you? Tell us what you think

    Read more of our ongoing Panda coverage:

    Google Algorithm Update Fallout, eHow Response
    Google Panda Update Winners, Losers, and Future Considerations
    EzineArticles Hit By Google Panda Update Again
    Google Panda Update Hits Demand Media’s eHow This Time
    Google Panda Update Benefits Google Properties
    Ranking in Google Now That Panda Has Gone Global
    Google Panda Update Winners: Video, News, Blogs, and Porn
    Google Panda Update Victim Xomba Loses AdSense Ads Too
    Google Panda Update Officially Goes Global (In English)
    Google Panda Update Launched in More Countries
    Google Panda Update – Made for Big Brands?
    Google Does Guest Post for Panda Victim HubPages
    Examiner’s Approach to Content Quality Post Panda Update
    MerchantCircle Goes From Panda Victim to Blekko Curator
    More here.

  • EzineArticles Aims to Get Rankings Back, Following Google Algorithm Update

    Google’s recent algorithm update aimed at content farms has drawn a mixture of praise and criticism. Much of this has from those questioning how Demand Media’s eHow was actually helped by the update, despite often being associated with the phrase "content farm".

    EzineArticles was one of the hardest-hit sites by the update. CEO Chris Knight wrote a blog post about how his site was affected, and what he is doing to try and get back up in the rankings. 

    "While we adamantly disagree with anyone who places the ‘Content Farm’ label on EzineArticles.com, we were not immune to this algorithm change," said Knight. "Traffic was down 11.5% on Thursday and over 35% on Friday. In our life-to-date, this is the single most significant reduction in market trust we’ve experienced from Google."

    Chris Knight of EzineArticles Talks Impact of Google Algorithm  Update"Google has a lot of smart PhD types working on this problem that I believe is not over by a long-shot. Reason: If you do a query for popular terms that we formerly ranked very high with, instead of an EzineArticles result, you may find low-quality sites that deliver even lower value to the user than our own members’ content! This is frustrating for sure," he added.

    To try and get back into Google’s good graces, EzineArticles is reducing the number of article submissions accepted by over 10% – articles that "are not unique enough". It will no longer accept article submissions through a WordPress Plugin. They’re reducing the number of ads per page. They’re raising the minimum article word count to 400. They’re "raising the bar" on keyword density limits. They’re removing articles considered "thin and spammy", and will put greater focus on rejection of advertorial articles. Submitted articles are required to be exclusive to the submitter (but won’t be required to be unique to Ezine Articles). 

    Adding NoFollow to all links was on the list of things to do, but Knight decided against it after complaints from submitters erupted in the comments on his post. Among the first to complain was copywriter Susan Greene, who said that many of the copywriters actually give priority to EzineArticles because of the lack of NoFollow. 

    When another commenter suggested that EzineArticles doesn’t exist to provide authority to submitters’ sites, but to provide  beneficial information to the readers, Greene wrote, "Not sure what Pollyanna planet you’re from but let me assure you, EzineArticles does not exist ‘to provide information that is beneficial to the readers.’ EzineArticles is a business, not a government organization or charity. EzineArticles was created to make its owner(s) money. There’s nothing wrong with that, but don’t fool yourself into thinking they’re a bunch of do-gooders. By the same token, the majority of us who publish on EzineArticles don’t do so to benefit readers. We too are running businesses, and EzineArticles helps our own websites get traffic and ultimately sales."

    That ought to help EzineArticles’ case. Google loves content that isn’t written to benefit readers (note sarcasm). 

    On removing NoFollow from the to-do list, Knight told commenters, "If you notice, it was near the bottom of our short-list which means it was only icing in the cake to further prove to Matt Cutts and Google that we’re not here to game Google nor let our Expert Authors do so via our platform." 

    I’m not sure that point is going to be very well proven if Cutts and co. read the conversation. 

    While he said he wouldn’t be acting on it for now, Knight did seem interested in another idea from a commenter: making NoFollow the default and making DoFollow something that could be earned through proof of quality. 

    Knight did point out that competing sites that have been including NoFollow were also hit by Google’s update.